98 Misc. 574 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1917
This case turns upon a novel and interesting question — unadjudicated, so far as I can find, in any court — as to a common carrier’s liability for the loss of baggage, under the highly organized and perfected conditions of modern railway travel. The plaintiff passenger carried with her upon an interstate journey three rings and a lavaliérre. She left the jewelry momentarily upon a table in the defendant’s dining-car, with waiter-employees and other persons nearby. When she returned to reclaim it, no trace could be found. Upon the pleadings and the opening of plaintiff’s counsel, I was of the opinion that, inasmuch as the passenger voluntarily retained custody of the property and herself left it exposed to theft or loss, the carrier could not be held liable, in the absence of proof warranting the inference that it had been stolen by an employee or that the carrier had been derelict in the duty owed even as to property thus inadvertently left behind. Accordingly I dismissed the complaint, but indicated willingness to consider, upon the present motion, the propositions of law insistently urged by the plaintiff’s counsel. I now am convinced that the controversy cannot be so readily resolved, and that its j.ust disposition requires its restoration for a retrial which will permit of the development of the full
In the days of old, when the stage-coach rumbled through rural England, and the passenger was seated inside the chaise, with his trunk or portmanteau on top, under the driver’s watchful eye, the differentiation in the handling of property carried as freight and property carried as the baggage of a passenger had not developed to present-day significance, and the stage-coach proprietor was held an insurer of the safe transportation of the property carried, against any loss not occasioned by inevitable accident, the owner’s or shipper’s own act, or the public enemy. Even in this country and this state, it was held, as late as 1838, that: ‘ ‘ The fact that the owner is present, or sends his servant to look after the property, does not alter the case.” Hollister v. Nowlen, 19 Wend. 234. Justice Bronson quoted with approval the declaration by Chambre, J., in Robinson v. Dunmore, 2 Bos. & Pull. 418, that: “ It has been determined, that if a man travel in a stage-coach and take his portmanteau with him, though he has his eye upon the portmanteau, yet the carrier is not absolved from his responsibility, but will be liable if the portmanteau be lost, ’ ’ and the New York Supreme Court of Judicature added: “ The liability of a carrier (as to baggage) is like that of an innkeeper; and it was said in Calye’s Case (8 Coke, 63), that ‘ it is no excuse for the innkeeper to say that he delivered to the guest the key of the chamber in which he lodged, and that he left the door open; but he ought to keep the goods and chattels of his guest there in safety.’ ” As the wayside inns were supplanted with more spacious hotels and the successor of the stagecoach became a whole train of steam-drawn coaches, the harshness of still holding the innkeeper or carrier
Similarly as to common carriers, the development of transportation brought differentiation in the handling of freight and baggage and tended to make imprac
• In other words, the carrier was not relieved from his traditional liability for the safe transport of baggage, and the passenger was not deprived of his right to requite the carriage of his baggage at the carrier’s risk. That liability was, however, given' a reasonable and workable basis. If the carrier provided and announced a system of baggage “ checking,” whereby the passenger’s valuable belongings could be turned over to the carrier’s exclusive custody during the journey, the insurer’s liability continued as to the articles of bag-'
If these fundamentals of historical setting are correctly stated, what of the instant case? Did the defendant carrier provide and announce a method by which articles of baggage, such as those lost, cquld be turned over to its exclusive custody? Did the- plaintiff disregard proffered facilities for safekeeping and nevertheless insist on retaining custody and possession of the articles herself, in the coach? Or.did the carrier provide and announce that as to these articles of baggage, it would not accept custody or responsibility for them in the baggage coach during the trip ? The quantity of jewelry carried by the plaintiff was reasonable in kind and value, for the purpose of the journey. As a matter of law, under the authorities reviewed by the learned Appellate Term in Sherman v. Pullman Co., 79 Misc. Rep. 52, these articles of personal jewelry,
Of course, the determination whether such a regulation as to the inclusion of jewelry in trunks or cases “ checked ” as baggage should be continued or modified in the public interest is a regulative inquiry within the province of the interstate commerce commission, rather than in the first instance of a court.' The question here, however, is not as to the propriety or reasonableness of the tariff regulation, or what, if anything, the commission should require the carrier to do in substitution for it or modification of it. The rule was one which the carrier clicl make; one which it had a right to make, if willing to accept the consequences; the question here is as to those consequences. The rule was validly in effect when the plaintiff made her journey; the jewelry was and is “ baggage ” which she was entitled to require the carrier to transport as an insurer, subject only to the carrier’s right to promulgate reasonable regulations as conditions of its acceptance, but not as accomplishment of its complete rejection of custody and liability. Subject to the regulative .power of the commission, the carrier had the right to prescribe by its tariff what articles of baggage it would require or permit to be “ checked ” and carried in the baggage car, as a part of the contents of trunks; the carrier had not the right by its tariffs or otherwise to decide what articles of baggage it would
There is, therefore, here no question of the plaintiff’s election, insistence, or choice, to keep her jewelry in her own possession; the carrier affirmatively refused to take custody or responsibility. She did not “ voluntarily ” take her jewelry with her on the train; the carrier had refused to let her do anything else. By the same method through which it effectually notified her that she must ‘ ‘ check ’ ’ other articles of baggage or release the carrier from insurer’s liability therefor, the carrier had notified her that she could not turn over the jewelry to its custody. There was then no need that she formally and affirmatively demand that the carrier do what it had notified her of its explicit refusal to do for her or any other passenger; .it was not necessary that, before packing her trunk, she should go to the carrier and demand that it disregard, in her case, its published rule, nor need she tender for “ checking ” her trunk with the jewelry included; as we have seen, she was bound by the tariff provisions and their legal consequences, and was entitled to act on the basis of them and their consequences. The carrier could have reduced its responsibility only by similarly notifying of willingness to 1 ‘ check, ’ ’ and the regulation of refusal would seem, as in the Munster Case, supra, to put in operation again the common-law rule.
Nor do I think that, under the authorities, it can be
Under the circumstances disclosed, I incline to the view that the carrier is liable for the loss of baggage of which it affirmatively refused to take custody and thereby required the passenger to retain in her own custody on the train. That the passenger might instead have forwarded her jewelry by registered mail, insured parcel post, express, or bonded messenger, cannot be viewed as releasing the carrier from its own obligation to transport at its risk, under the rules above stated, all the baggage of this passenger. If it be said that the foregoing places upon the carrier plenary liability for articles which it had no opportunity to watch or care for, the answer must be that the carrier itself chose that tiie jewelry should not be in its own exclusive custody. And if it be urged that it is a reasonable and sensible regulation which forbids the inclusion of valuable jewelry in trunks or cases “ checked ” in the baggage car, that cannot, without legislative or judicial redefinition of “ baggage,” free the carrier from its duty to provide some place of safe transport for a reasonable quantity of jewelry, as alternative of its acceptance of the passenger’s custody at the carrier’s risk.
Under the above-stated conclusion, it is unnecessary to discuss here the question whether a sufficient showing was indicated for a submission to the jury on the issue of the carrier’s negligence or the theft of the jewelry, by an employee. The determination indicated upon .the trial is set aside, and the case restored to the calendar for trial before me, in Trial Term, Part III, on January 29, 1917.
Ordered accordingly.